Atheist John Loftus and Christian Peter May discuss whether people choose whatb they believe or whether religion is down to where you are born in the world.
2008-04-12T00:00:00+01:00
Atheist John Loftus and Christian Peter May discuss whether people choose whatb they believe or whether religion is down to where you are born in the world.
2026-05-18T08:23:00Z
Tom Wright and Mike Bird discuss whether building God’s kingdom is just like secular humanism, how to pray to the Holy Spirit, and share tips for relearning biblical Greek. Dive into the differences between Christian hope and secular progress, and discover how the Trinity shapes prayer.
2026-05-07T22:58:00Z
William Lane Craig and Alex Malpass go head-to-head on the Kalam cosmological argument: Does the universe need a cause, and if so, must that cause be God? Hosted by John Nelson, this episode dives into infinities, Hilbert’s Hotel, and whether the argument really points to a divine creator.
2026-04-29T23:00:00Z
Is the resurrection of Jesus fact or fiction? In this lively debate, Alex O’Connor and Trent Horn clash over the historical evidence, alternative explanations, and what really happened after the crucifixion. Hosted by John Nelson, this episode dives deep into eyewitness testimony, group visions, and why the resurrection remains one of history’s most hotly contested events.
2026-04-23T17:00:00Z
AI experts Nigel Crook and Andy Bannister join Sam McKee to debate whether artificial intelligence will lead to a brighter future or new dangers for humanity. They tackle the ethics of AI, its impact on work and relationships, and where faith and human uniqueness fit in an automated world.
2026-04-16T22:45:00Z
Live from John Colet School, philosophers Alanzo Paul and Harry Amos debate the problem of suffering. Is pain evidence against God, or can faith make sense of evil, grief, and hope? Hosted by Sam McKee, this episode tackles the toughest questions about belief, meaning, and what suffering really means.
2026-04-09T20:57:00Z
Is modern life killing our sense of meaning? In this episode, John Vervaeke and Malcolm Guite join John Nelson to unpack the “meaning crisis”—from loneliness and anxiety to the loss of shared story. They explore why facts alone aren’t enough, the power of imagination and poetry, and how practices, community, and pilgrimage could help us recover depth and belonging.
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